Brazil dam ‘killing’ biodiversity and local culture


“The dam broke the river’s flood pulse. Upstream, it’s like it’s always flooded. Downstream, it’s like a permanent drought,” said Andre Oliveira Sawakuchi, a geoscientist at the University of Sao Paulo. That is devastating fish and turtle populations whose feeding and reproduction cycles depend on the igapos, he adds. — Reuters

SAO PAULO: Carlos Fabal holds a dead fish, Junior Pereira looks grimly at a puddle that used to be part of Brazil’s Xingu river, a mighty Amazon tributary that has been desiccated by the massive Belo Monte hydroelectric dam.

Pereira, a member of the Pupekuri Indigenous group, chokes up talking about the impact of Belo Monte, the world’s fourth-biggest hydroelectric complex, which locals said is killing one of the most biodiverse regions on earth and forcing them to abandon their way of life.

“Our culture is fishing, it’s the river. We’ve always lived on what the river provides,” said Pereira, 39, who looks like a man trapped between two worlds, wearing a traditional indigenous necklace and a red baseball cap.

He gazes at the once-flooded landscape, which Belo Monte’s water diversion has made a patchwork of puddles dotted with stranded fish.

“We’ve lost our river,” he said. “Now we have to buy food in the city.”

Stretching nearly 2,000km, the Xingu ebbs and flows with the rainy season, creating vast “igapos,” or flooded forests, that are crucial to huge numbers of species.

They are also crucial to an estimated 25,000 indigenous people and others who live along the river.

Belo Monte diverts a 100km stretch of the Xingu’s “Volta Grande,” or Big Bend, in the northern county of Altamira to power a hydroelectric dam with a capacity of 11,233 megawatts, 6.2% of the total electricity capacity of Latin America’s biggest economy.

Built for an estimated 40 billion reais (US$7.5bil or RM33.29bil) and inaugurated in 2016, the dam diverts up to 80% of the river’s water, which scientists, environmentalists and residents said is disastrous for this unique ecosystem.

“The dam broke the river’s flood pulse. Upstream, it’s like it’s always flooded. Downstream, it’s like a permanent drought,” said Andre Oliveira Sawakuchi, a geoscientist at the University of Sao Paulo.

That is devastating fish and turtle populations whose feeding and reproduction cycles depend on the igapos, he said.

Sitting by the Xingu’s breathtaking Jericoa waterfalls, which the Juruna people consider sacred, indigenous leader Giliarde Juruna said the situation is a clash of worldviews.

“Progress for us is having the forest, the animals, the rivers the way God made them. The progress white people believe in is totally different,” said Juruna, 40.

“They think they’re doing good with this project, but they’re destroying nature and hurting people, including themselves.”

Proposed in the 1970s, Belo Monte was authorised under ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), who just won a new term in Brazil’s October elections.

As Lula, 77, prepares to take office again on Jan 1, the project is drawing fresh scrutiny from those hoping the veteran leftist will fulfill his promise to do a better job protecting the Amazon than outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro, who presided over a surge in deforestation.

Touted as a clean-energy source and engine of economic development, Belo Monte has not exactly lived up to expectations.

According to the company that operates it, Norte Energia, the dam’s average output this year has been 4,212 megawatts, less than half its capacity.

A recent study meanwhile found its operations tripled the region’s greenhouse gas emissions, mainly methane released by decomposing forest that was killed by the flooding of the dam reservoir.

In 2015, researchers from the Socio-Environmental Institute (ISA) conservation group teamed up with the Juruna to document the devastation.

They have devised a new, less-disruptive way for Belo Monte to manage water, the “Piracema” plan, named for the period when fish swim upriver to spawn.

Researchers said the plan is a relatively small tweak to the dam’s current water usage, adapting it to the natural flood cycles.

Brazil’s environmental regulator is due to rule soon whether to order Norte Energia to adopt it. — AFP

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